Gamer is a 2009 movie starring Gerard Butler. He plays John "Kable" Tillman, a death row inmate, forced to battle other prisoners in an online game called Slayers, and has his every move is controlled by a young gamer's remote device. If they survive 30 matches, they get a full pardon. To the players, Kable and the other inmates are just simulated characters. But, to a resistance group that opposes the game's now-billionaire inventor, Ken Castle (Michael C. Hall), Kable, who has just survived his record-setting 27th match, is a critical piece of their plan to end the sinister inventor's form of high-tech slavery.

This movie contains examples of:

Ax-Crazy: Hackman is a mountainous inmate who enjoys killing way, way too much. Lampshaded when Kable notes that he really isn't right in the head when Hackman comes to boast about killing another prisoner.

Kable. Not only did he survive for so long in what is essentially Counter-Strike with real people, he's also capable of killing a dozen Mooks in close combat with his bare hands.

It's said that Hackman killed nine dozen people, and he's one of the few people that survive an encounter with Kable.

Batman Gambit: Castle first tries to sell his Mind Control Nanites to the military, it folds, then turns it into 2 games, with plans to disperse it aerially to Take Over the World. Honestly, if he had skipped right to that last step (and we don't know if he didn't) all it would take is one hacker to turn us ALL into zombies.

The Computer Is a Cheating Bastard: Well, not really, since Kable isn't a computer, but it's acknowledged in the film that he takes control during key moments during the games, giving him a better chance of surviving.

Crapsack World: People seem to have absolutely no regard for human life. It makes some sense in Slayers but the same attitude is shown in Societies.

Curbstomp Battle: The final confrontation between Kable and Hackman. Mostly because Castle was in control of Hackman.

Engineered Public Confession: The cause of Castle's downfall, right before Kable kills him. A surprising example considering how tech-savvy Castle is-he really should have seen this coming.

Evil Is Hammy: Apparently, Castle started inventing virtual worlds because he ran out of real-world scenery to chew.

Fate Worse Than Death: Lampshaded with a very somber quip. In the Hellhole Prison where Kable is locked up, one of the inmates completely loses it and tears out his own throat while no one bothers to stop him. When the guards arrive to question what happened, an old con wearily notes "looks like he escaped".

Just Hit Him: Subverted; when Kable slams a mook headfirst into the floor, there's a nasty crunching sound and it's pretty clear he ain't getting up from that one.

Knuckle Cracking: Well, neck-cracking, but Hackman flexes his neck for the same effect.

Made of Iron: Hackman, who's so tough that getting rammed into a concrete wall while hanging from a speeding truck only mildly inconveniences him, and later on, Kable has to break his neck twice to actually kill him.

The Most Dangerous Video Game: Inverted: the player is in no danger, but the characters they control are real human beings, who can be manipulated (and killed) as they please.

Pretty Little Headshots: Averted with most of the kills and Sandra, who gets her head obliterated from the neck up.

Psychic-Assisted Suicide: This is inverted at the end. Castle has Kable under his control, when Kable tells Castle to think of Kable stabbing him. Castle does just that, unconsciously, and gets himself killed. It's The Game used for murder.

Psycho for Hire: Hackman slaughtered a dozen people on the outside just so he could be locked up and enjoy all the death he can cause in the battlefield of Slayers. He teams up with Castle for the sole purpose to get free reign to murder Kable and anyone else he feels like.

Sliding Scale of Idealism Versus Cynicism: Way, way, waaaaaay over on the Cynical end. People are depicted as being generally depraved, sadistic, amoral monsters with no regard for each others' lives who will willingly sacrifice actual, real people by the thousands for entertainment. (Those people are almost all volunteers, but still.)

There Are No Girls on the Internet: Kable's wife is being controlled by a sweaty, Fat Bastard and its implied many of the other women in "Society" are too. Also inverted; one scene shows a male character whom Nika is flirting with is controlled by a woman.

This Loser Is You: It's a film about "video games" controlled by actual human beings in depraved - either sexually OR violently - situations, and aside from the MLG player behind Kable, what other gamers we see are disgusting, morbidly obese perverts and sadistic, murderous sociopaths with no regard for human life.

Trailers Always Lie: The trailer makes it seem like the entire movie was about the online game and nothing else.

Troll/GIFT: A good chunk of the characters are straight-up trolls, and the GIFT is in full, terrifying force here.

Villain with Good Publicity: Castle has managed to get almost everyone to overlook the fact that they're playing deathmatches and Second Life with real people and is said to have exceeded Bill Gates' wealth. He did this by pulling the entire US Prison system back from the verge of bankruptcy, revitalizing the economy and everybody involved, convict or otherwise, signed up "voluntarily".

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